changing it to 100 sq ft was a good call too. That was a biggie.
1. I would prefer a simple plant limit to a square footage limitation, for example, "6 mature flowering plants and 30 immature plants for each occupant of a residence or parcel". This would make enforcement much simpler; cops can count to six.
2. On the taxation thing, it ought to be at the state level and it needs to be at a rate that allows the state make a little money but not so high that it encourages and maintains a black market. This will be a balancing act, but something like $10 per ounce ought to work. If last year's MJ sales in CA was $15B, and if MJ sold for $4000 per pound, then a $10 per ounce tax would generate ~$500M in taxes for the state.
3. Allowing local jurisdictions to decide to disallow MJ sales would give the local politicians some control. If locals decide not to allow sales then they get 10% of the revenue instead of 80%; what they don't get is divided equally, according to population, amongst counties that do allow sales. Maybe localities that don't allow sales should get none of the revenue?
I rewrote items 6 and 7 to reflect these taxation changes:
- [FONT="]Ensure that a consistent, statewide regulation and taxation framework for the commercial sale of Cannabis is devised and implemented by the California state legislature. All taxation shall be at the state level and shall be applied equally to all commercial sellers, with no taxation at the local level.[/FONT]
- [FONT="]Ensure that cultivation of Cannabis for personal use, and not for resale, is untaxed. Personal gardens shall be exempt from taxation by the state and local governments.[/FONT]